Cincinnati.Com
NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help
Currently:
80°F
Mostly Sunny
Weather | Traffic
The Enquirer
HOME
NEWS
ENTERTAINMENT
SPORTS
REDS
BENGALS
LOCAL GUIDE
MULTIMEDIA
ARCHIVES
SEARCH
 
 TODAY'S ENQUIRER 
 Front Page 
-- Local News 
 Sports 
 Business 
 Editorials 
 Tempo 
 Home Style 
 Travel 
 Health 
 Technology 
 Weather 
 Back Issues 
 Search 
 Subscribe 

 SPORTS 
 Bearcats 
 Bengals 
 High School 
 Reds 
 Xavier 

 VIEWPOINTS 
 Jim Borgman 
 Columnists 
 Readers' views 

 ENTERTAINMENT 
 Movies 
 Dining 
 Horoscopes 
 Lottery Results 
 Local Events 
 Video Games 

 CINCINNATI.COM 
 Giveaways 
 Maps/Directions 
 Send an E-Postcard 
 Coupons 
 Visitor's Guide 

 CLASSIFIEDS 
 Jobs 
 Cars 
 Homes 
 Obituaries 
 General 
 Place an ad 

 HELP 
 Feedback 
 Subscribe 
 Search 
 Newsroom Directory 




 
Friday, March 22, 2002

Village officials face obstruction charges


New Vienna officer jailed in isolation cell

By Howard Wilkinson, hwilkinson@enquirer.com
The Cincinnati Enquirer

        WILMINGTON — There may be more people charged in the case of a part-time police officer in the tiny village of New Vienna who is charged with murder for shooting a suspect, a Clinton County law enforcement officer said Thursday.

        Obstruction charges are possible against those suspected of withholding documents that deputies needed to make their case against the 29-year-old police officer, David M. Mueller.

Mueller
Mueller
        “I would not be surprised to see other people charged,” said Chief Deputy Ralph D. Fizer Jr.

        Mr. Mueller — a part-time officer in a village police department where the only full-time employee is the chief — was in an isolation cell in the Clinton County jail Thursday after arraignment on charges of murder and tampering with evidence. Bail was set at $100,000. He was arrested near his home in Hamilton on Wednesday.

        Assistant County Prosecutor Rick Moyer would not comment Thursday on the possibility of additional charges.

        “All I can say is that this is an ongoing investigation,” Mr. Moyer said.

        Deputy Fizer would not say who might be charged, but law enforcement officials in this county 50 miles north of Cincinnati are unhappy with New Vienna village officials, who they say stonewalled their repeated requests for documents after the Feb. 4 shooting.

        The officer is accused of gunning down 32-year-old Robert Cundiff at his Rice Street home in the village of about 900 people near the Highland County border.

        Officer Mueller had responded to a domestic call at the Cundiff home. The man's wife had reported that her husband had threatened to burn down the home with her and her children in it, Deputy Fizer said.

        Deputy Fizer said Thursday that sheriff's deputies reconstructed the event before charging the police officer.

        “There was no evidence whatsoever that the officer's life was in danger at any time,” Deputy Fizer said.

        Deputy Fizer also said there is no evidence that Officer Mueller knew Mr. Cundiff previously and that deputies could find no reports of earlier police calls to the Cundiff house.

        In the week following the shooting, sheriff's deputies — working through New Vienna Mayor Timothy Bentz — tried to obtain Officer Mueller's personnel file, the offense report on the incident at the Cundiff home, and a copy of a detailed statement Officer Mueller made to his superiors right after the shooting.

        “We were stalled and stonewalled,” Deputy Fizer said.

        The chief deputy said he talked to the mayor on Feb. 6 and “tried to explain to him that this is all public record and that he needed to get it to us.”

        The material was not released by village officials, so Deputy Fizer said the sheriff's department went to court and obtained a warrant to search the New Vienna Village Building.

        The mayor could not be reached for comment Thursday.

        Deputy Fizer said he does not understand why village officials withheld the documents, except to say that New Vienna “is a strange, strange place. The guys with the high-powered positions there don't seem to want to cooperate with anybody.”

        A Clinton County grand jury handed down its indictments against Officer Mueller on Wednesday afternoon. He is scheduled to appear in court again April 12.

        Unless Officer Mueller posts bail and is released, Mr. Fizer said, he would be kept in isolation away from the general jail population.

        “That's standard operating procedure when a law-enforcement officer has to be put in jail,” Mr. Fizer said.

        Officer David M. Mueller, 29, was in jail Thursday on murder charges.

       



Floods don't rise to occasion
3 issues threaten profiling suit deal
Lawyers view church records
Pope's comment welcome locally
Tug-of-war for Hyundai facility
- Village officials face obstruction charges
Haitian pleads family hardship
Metro outlines its terminal upgrades
State won't yield city right-of-way
Tristate A.M. Report
UK fans set for sweet victory
Workers to turn in or justify use of cars
BRONSON: No deal
HOWARD: Some Good News
SMITH AMOS: Chief Streicher
WELLS: The Roach report
Ohio House passes concealed weapons bill
School funding talks collapse
Garbage tax OK'd by panel
Ky. senator prepares legal battle
Slot machine proposal waiting on Senate for start

 

Latest Headline News
Updated Every 30 Minutes
AP TOP HEADLINE NEWS

Iraqi Official: 150,000 Civilians Dead

Sen. Allen Concedes Defeat in Virginia

Bush, Pelosi Hold White House Talks

Massive Recall of Acetaminophen Underway

Mubarak Warns Against Hanging Saddam

Bolton Unlikely to Win Senate Approval

AP: Startling Findings in Tillman Probe

Ed Bradley of '60 Minutes' Dies at 65

U.S. Rises in Auto Reliability Ratings

49ers Look to Relocate New Stadium



Cincinnati.Com
Search our site by keyword:  
Search also: News | Jobs | Homes | Cars | Classifieds | Obits | Coupons | Events | Dining
Movies/DVDs | Video Games | Hotels | Golf | Visitor's Guide | Maps/Directions | Yellow Pages

  CINCINNATI.COM  |  NKY.COM  |  ENQUIRER  |  CIN WEEKLY  |  Classifieds  |  Cars  |  Homes  |  Jobs  |  Help


Search | Questions/help | News tips | Letters to the editors | Subscribe
Newspaper advertising | Web advertising | Place a classified | Circulation

Copyright 1995-2007. The Cincinnati Enquirer, a Gannett Co. Inc. newspaper.
Use of this site signifies agreement to terms of service updated 12/19/2002.